Emergenz und Genese der Tonalität im Tschadischen: Ein Beitrag zur Sprachgeschichte Nordostafrikas
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24425/for.2024.152390Abstrakt
The Chadic languages, numbering approximately 150 and spoken in central Sudan, did not—as members of the Afroasiatic phylum—originally dispose and make use of the structural feature of tonality. The article describes the gradual emergence of tonality as a phonemic means and change from a predominantly segmental stage in the east (Eastern Chad) to a suprasegmental (tonal) type of structure in the west (Northern Nigeria); the five-tone-level language of Mushere on the central Nigerian Plateau represents the peak of this transformational process from segmentality to tonality. In order to illustrate the purely tonal structure of this highly emancipated Afroasiatic language a version of the Lord’s Prayer is added, translated for the first time into Mushere by Philibus Diyakal.
Pobrania
Opublikowane
Jak cytować
Numer
Dział
Licencja
Prawa autorskie (c) 2024 Folia Orientalia

Utwór dostępny jest na licencji Creative Commons Uznanie autorstwa 4.0 Międzynarodowe.
Copyright on any open access article in the Folia Orientalia journal published by Polish Academy of Sciences is retained by the author(s). Authors grant Polish Academy of Sciences a license to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher. Authors also grant any user the right to use the article freely if its integrity is maintained and its original authors, citation details and publisher are identified. The Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 formalizes these and other terms and conditions of publishing articles.
The editorial team of Folia Orientalia implements an open access policy by publishing materials in the form of the so-called Gold Open Access and encourages authors to place articles published in the journal in open repositories (after the review or the final version of the publisher), provided that a link to the journal’s website is provided.
Exceptions to copyright policy
For the articles which were previously published, before year 2020, policies that are different from the above. In all such, access to these articles is free from fees or any other access restrictions. Permissions for the use of the texts published in that journal may be sought directly from the editorial team of Folia Orientalia, by e-mail: folia.orientalia@uj.edu.pl.
English
Język Polski